| hub |
A hardware device that contains multiple independent but connected modules of network and internetwork equipment. Hubs can be active (where they repeat signals sent through them) or passive (where they do not repeat but merely split signals sent through them).
Ãâó: dsg.port.ac.uk/~mab/Teaching/ARCH3/Glossary.html
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| hub |
A device that interconnects clients and servers, repeating (or amplifying) the signals between them. Hubs act as wiring "concentrators" in networks based on star topologies (rather than bus topologies, in which computers are daisy-chained together).
Ãâó: www.connectworld.net/fiber/profile.htm
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| hub |
Also called sponsors, hubs are large companies, very active in EDI, that strongly encourage their paper-based business partners to begin using EDI.
Ãâó: www.raytheon.com/connections/supplier/ecommerce/gl...
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| hub |
the central part of a wheel where the spokes come together. The term is familiar to frequent fliers who travel through airport "hubs" to make connecting flights from one point to another. In data communications, a hub is a place of convergence where data arrives from one or more directions and is forwarded out in one or more other directions. A hub usually includes a switch of some kind. (And a product that is called a "switch" could usually be considered a hub as well. ...
Ãâó: www.netunlimited.com/glossary.html
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| hub |
A common connection point for devices in a network.
Ãâó: home.clevertech.net/help.asp
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